On 5/8/2023 7:17 PM, Karl May wrote:
Hi.

Thanks a lot for the response.

My misconception comes probably from looking at book keeping and GnuCash
through continental European eyes.

There may, of course be differences, how I keep books and what I need to report vs somebody in continental Europe.

But I look at bookkeeping from the point of view of how it was done pen and ink on paper not all that long ago (within my lifetime; how I learned to do it). I am positive that continental European bookkeepers were also able to do it pen and ink on paper.

If can be done pen and ink on paper, can be done using gnucash. If you choose "journal view" then you enter transactions just like you did in the good old days (not! because of the many transcription errors doing manual posting from journal to ledger --- the computer automates posting, no errors).

Show me the subsection of books, the transactions, etc. as they would be pen and ink on paper ans then make your claim "can't do that using gnucash" But please note that does NOT mean using one of the skeleton example CoAs that come with gnucash.  It means you may have to "roll your own" CoA in gnucash to match your paper one. Nor am I talking about terminology differences.

Michael D Novack



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